Hi
The planned Whitely's Hut to Lake Nameless then Blue Peaks and back to Lady Lake Hut walk came a little off the rails due to the high waterway levels. But still good fun was had.
The climb up to Whitely's Hut gave the first sign of impending difficulties with the small creek you cross having a fierce water flow. The wire rope was handy but still due consideration was required before crossing. It was clear that it would be a wet boot trip. Up top the walking was on track until it petered out near Lake Ironstone so away we went. The primary tool was the Asus Nexus capably driven by Sthughes running the latest Tasmap that he had scanned in. The quality improvement on terrain conditions was noticeably better than the older map on MemoryMap. The 7" tablet is as good as paper maps to read from with the bonus of current GPS position. The Garmin 62s' small screen size does make it challenging to get a sense of location, a case of either being lost in the trees at micro level or lost in lack of screen resolution at the macro level. Yeap, the Garmin 62S is heavily dependent on the inbuilt compass being correctly calibrated and time for me to dump my case for it as to be expected the magnetic clip plays merry hell with it if you use track up rather than north up. Still I must admit I have no great faith in electronic compasses. It would have been a wonderful site for old timers seeing two electronic devices being checked by an old fashion compass
So around the lake we went on the eastern side. The partly snow covered scree made life interesting at times but apart from wishing I had gone lighter weight when pinned by my pack in a tumble we all managed largely unscathed. We then had the fun of crossing the swampy ground to Lake Nameless and the Ironstone Hut. One of the minor mysteries of naming in Tasmanian is that Ironstone Hut is on Lake Nameless
Two decided to jump across a waterway while one decided to wade across a wider but shallower section of it. But if somewhat soggier we made it to the hut.
The next day was follow your nose to to Blue Peaks. It was fantastic crossing between the northern end of Lake Jonny and the pond above it as per the traces I had put into OSM from Bing. Bing can be either spot on or maybe fifty-hundred metres out and the ground truthing in the area revealed it was pretty much on the money. I was very happy with that result
Then we hit the Fisher River and the wheels fell off. In the pre planning the Fisher River was always going to be a bit suspect but having crossed it lower down on the Lake Explorer track a couple of years earlier I felt " how hard can it be higher up"? Err, rather hard. I was amazed by the water speed on the flat sections of the river with water appearing to be a rapid. We went lower down as it narrow hopping for a crossing point but the sheer water speed meant such a crossing was ill advise so like all sensible walkers we beat an "honourable" retreat over a saddle. Nature rewarded our common-sense with stunning views from a high alpine meadow that we stopped for lunch at.
Then we made the second over optimistic choice of heading for the northern side of Snake Lake between it and Lake Explorer. I will now be looking for in OSM a way of saying, "do not cross unless low water levels or you can represent the USA on the long jump". It was just on the horrible side of maybe, maybe not, you can jump and if you miss then you will freeze as the water was deep. Time to retreat and go around the lake and look at crossing on the Lake Nameless side on the Higgs Track. So we arrived at the crossing and it was not one to take lightly either. We got across with only wet boots but took some careful footwork to avoid visiting Lake Snake again
We then camped at Weston Lake and again Bing was pretty much on the money. The lake tracing panned out well and it was at a much higher level of detail than the Tasmap 1:25,000 map was. It was a freezing night so woke up with frozen socks and boots that rang when bumped together. But oh what a morning. The sun had warmth and streamed into to the well placed tents so we made like lizards.
The next "challenge" was to use the Garmin 62S and my rather poor close in eyesight to plan a way to Whitely's Hut. Decided on the southern side of the Lake though in retrospect the first up option of the northern side would have been better. But what the heck this proved that the two Shadow packs were more than up to "some scrub". We arrived at the eastern end and sure enough the promised by Contours Australia 5M "path" it was good going. The little lake at the top was pretty close to the OSM trace. By following the path of least resistance we soon found the fishing track and like most of the "traditional" routes it wisely skirted the swamp that Tasmap's had marked. We soon arrived at the hut.
Then we had the decision. Set up camp and climb Ironstone, take an easy day off, or head out and enjoy fathers' day. We decided that mother nature had intended us to be home for fathers' day so off we went. To spruce the journey up we took the alternative route back to the car on the way down.
We then checked out the lower brook for the Lady Lake Hut and found as mention the foot bridge destroyed and wire across a bit further up to help in the crossing. The water level was soaked boots but crossable. However, people need to be aware that a reasonable night's rain may make this rather more challenging to the point of ill-advised.
So the learning.
1. OSM with Bing pre planning can produce some very useful maps
2. The Asus Nexus 7" tablet is very impressive in the field providing it is well protected from the elements.
3. When push comes to shove two technological geeks trust a traditional compass more than their fancy electronic devices when it comes to finding a compass bearing.
4. The paper maps were never touched.
5. The One Planet Shadow pack is more than up to the conditions encountered. The McMillan is its usual tank and prone to encourage over packing of stuff. All packs were very comfortable.
6. We live an a beautiful part of the world
And now a few pictures.
"lt only took six years. From now on, l´ll write two letters a week instead of one."
(Shawshank Redemption)